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Stalin's Industrial Revolution
Politics and Workers, 1928–1931

Hiroaki Kuromiya (Author)

9780521387415, Cambridge University Press

Paperback, published 28 June 1990

388 pages
22.8 x 15.2 x 2.5 cm, 0.555 kg

'Kuromiya's scholarship is impressive and his argument strong … By examining the links between high politics, mass ideology and proletarian society, Kuromiya has managed to produce a balanced and thoughtful account of this important period in Soviet history.' The Times Literary Supplement

This is the first political and social history in English of Stalin's industrial revolution during the first Five-Year Plan, 1928–1932. The rapid diversion of vast resources into industrialization severely squeezed national consumption, imposing a heavy burden and sacrifice upon the entire nation. Dr Kuromiya argues that Stalin and his advisers made industrialization politically possible by presenting it as 'class war.' True to their ideological convictions, mercilessly suppressed those suspected of opposition as 'class enemies' and 'wreckers,' and actively sought the support of industrial workers, Komsomols (members of youth organizations) and Communists. Examining the vision, passion, commitment, and resentments of these people, the author shows that Stalin's leadership gained an important degree of support while brutally crushing resistance. Stalin's industrialization was also a war of central economic planning against market forces. This book vividly describes the way in which the objectives and capabilities of various institutions and organizations affected the formation of the Soviet planned economy.

Subject Areas: 20th century history: c 1900 to c 2000 [HBLW], European history [HBJD]

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